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The Saudi oil war against Russia, Iran and the US

The Saudi oil war against Russia, Iran and the US thumbnail

Saudi Arabia has unleashed an economic war against selected oil producers. The strategy masks the House of Saud’s real agenda. But will it work?

Rosneft Vice President MikhailLeontyev; “Prices can be manipulative…Saudi Arabia has begun making big discounts on oil. This is political manipulation, and Saudi Arabia is being manipulated, which could end badly.”

A correction is in order; the Saudis are not being manipulated. What the House of Saud is launching is “Tomahawks of spin,” insisting they’re OK with oil at $90 a barrel; also at $80 for the next two years; and even at $50 to $60 for Asian and North American clients.

The fact is Brent crude had already fallen to below $90 a barrel because China – and Asia as a whole – was already slowing down economically, although to a lesser degree compared to the West. Production, though, remained high – especially by Saudi Arabia and Kuwait – even with very little Libyan and Syrian oil on the market and with Iran forced to cut exports by a million barrels a day because of the US economic war, a.k.a. sanctions.

The House of Saud is applying a highly predatory pricing strategy, which boils down to reducing market share of its competitors, in the middle- to long-term. At least in theory, this could make life miserable for a lot of players – from the US (energy development, fracking and deepwater drilling become unprofitable) to producers of heavy, sour crude such as Iran and Venezuela. Yet the key target, make no mistake, is Russia.

A strategy that simultaneously hurts Iran, Iraq, Venezuela, Ecuador and Russia cannot escape the temptation of being regarded as an “Empire of Chaos” power play, as in Washington cutting a deal with Riyadh. A deal would imply bombing ISIS/ISIL/Daesh leader Caliph Ibrahim is just a prelude to bombing Bashar al-Assad’s forces; in exchange, the Saudis squeeze oil prices to hurt the enemies of the “Empire of Chaos.”

Yet it’s way more complicated than that.

Sticking it to Washington

Russia’s state budget for 2015 requires oil at least at $100 a barrel. Still, the Kremlin is borrowing no more than $7 billion in 2015 from the usual “foreign investors”, plus $27.2 billion internally. Hardly an economic earthquake.

Besides, the ruble has already fallen over 14 percent since July against the US dollar. By the way, the currencies of key BRICS members have also fallen; 7.8 percent for the Brazilian real, 1.6 percent for the Indian rupee. And Russia, unlike the Yeltsin era, is not broke; it holds at least $455 billion in foreign reserves.

The House of Saud’s target of trying to bypass Russia as a top supplier of oil to the EU is nothing but a pipe dream; EU refineries would have to be reframed to process Saudi light crude, and that costs a fortune.

Geopolitically, it gets juicier when we see that central to the House of Saud strategy is to stick it to Washington for not fulfilling its “Assad must go” promise, as well as the neo-con obsession in bombing Iran. It gets worse (for the Saudis) because Washington – at least for now – seems more concentrated in toppling Caliph Ibrahim than Bashar al-Assad, and might be on the verge of signing a nuclear deal with Tehran as part of the P5+1 on November 24.

On the energy front, the ultimate House of Saud nightmare would be both Iran and Iraq soon being able to take over the Saudi status as key swing oil producers in the world. Thus the Saudi drive to deprive both of much-needed oil revenue. It might work – as in the sanctions biting Tehran even harder. Yet Tehran can always compensate by selling more gas to Asia.

So here’s the bottom line. A beleaguered House of Saud believes it may force Moscow to abandon its support of Damascus, and Washington to scotch a deal with Tehran. All this by selling oil below the average spot price. That smacks of desperation. Additionally, it may be interpreted as the House of Saud dithering if not sabotaging the coalition of the cowards/clueless in its campaign against Caliph Ibrahim’s goons.

Compounding the gloom, the EU might be allowed to muddle through this winter – even considering possible gas supply problems with Russia because of Ukraine. Still, low Saudi oil prices won’t prevent a near certain fourth recession in six years just around the EU corner.

 Reuters / Hamad I Mohammed

Reuters / Hamad I Mohammed

Go East, young Russian

Russia, meanwhile, slowly but surely looks East. China’s Vice Premier Wang Yang has neatly summarized it; “China is willing to export to Russia such competitive products as agricultural goods, oil and gas equipment, and is ready to import Russian engineering products.” Couple that with increased food imports from Latin America, and it doesn’t look like Moscow is on the ropes.

A hefty Chinese delegation led by Premier Li Keqiang has just signed a package of deals in Moscow ranging from energy to finance, and from satellite navigation to high-speed rail cooperation. For China, which overtook Germany as Russia’s top trading partner in 2011, this is pure win-win.

The central banks of China and Russia have just signed a crucial, 3-year, 150 billion yuan bilateral local-currency swap deal. And the deal is expandable. The City of London basically grumbles– but that’s what they usually do.

This new deal, crucially, bypasses the US dollar. No wonder it’s now a key component of the no holds barred proxy economic war between the US and Asia. Moscow cannot but hail it as sidelining many of the side effects of the Saudi strategy.

The Russia-China strategic partnership has been on the up and up since the “epochal” (Putin’s definition) $400 billion, 30-year gas deal of the century” clinched in May. And the economic reverberations won’t stop.

There’s bound to be an alignment of the Chinese-driven New Silk Roads with a revamped Trans-Siberian railway. At the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) summit last month in Dushanbe, President Putin praised the “great potential” of developing a “common SCO transport system” linking “Russia’s Trans-Siberian railway and the Baikal-Amur mainline” with the Chinese Silk Roads, thus “benefiting all countries in Eurasia.”

Moscow is progressively lifting restrictions and is now offering Beijing a wealth of potential investments. Beijing is progressively accessing not only much-needed Russian raw materials but acquiring cutting-edge technology and advanced weapons.

Beijing will get S-400 missile systems and Su-35 fighter jets as soon as the first quarter of 2015. Further on down the road will come Russia’s brand new submarine, the Amur 1650, as well as components for nuclear-powered satellites.

Reuters / Hamad I Mohammed

Reuters / Hamad I Mohammed

The road is paved with yuan

Presidents Putin and Xi, who have met no less than nine times since Xi came to power last year, are scaring the hell out of the “Empire of Chaos.” No wonder; their number one shared priority is to dent the hegemony of the US dollar – and especially the petrodollar – in the global financial system.

The yuan has been trading on the Moscow Exchange – the first bourse outside of China to offer regulated yuan trading. It’s still at only $1.1 billion (in September). Russian importers pay for 8 percent of all Chinese goods with yuan instead of dollars, but that’s rising fast. And it will rise exponentially when Moscow finally decides to accept yuan under Gazprom’s $400 billion “gas deal of the century.”

This is the way the multipolar world goes. The House of Saud deploys the petrodollar weapon? The counterpunch is increased trade in a basket of currencies. Additionally, Moscow sends a message to the EU, which is losing a lot of Russia trade because of counter-productive sanctions, thus accelerating the EU’s next recession. Economic war does work both ways.

The House of Saud believes it can dump a tsunami of oil in the market and back it up with a tsunami of spin – creating the illusion the Saudis control oil prices. They don’t. As much as this strategy will fail, Beijing is showing the way out; trading in other currencies stabilizes prices. The only losers, in the end, will be those who stick to trade in US dollars.

RT



13 Comments on "The Saudi oil war against Russia, Iran and the US"

  1. Nony on Wed, 15th Oct 2014 10:27 pm 

    fungible product. World pricing. Yawn.

  2. Makati1 on Wed, 15th Oct 2014 10:34 pm 

    Great article and covers a lot of current ground in the East. Throw in the involvement of Mongolia and India and you have an even bigger partnership. Even South Korean is interested in the Silk Road and Japan is being offered a gas pipeline from east Russia.

    All closing, or nearing closure, in the last few moths, but underway for years. The Western sanctions, and now the Saudi attack, only hastened the pace and showed the rest of the world how vulnerable they are if they deal in USD.

    Blowback for KSA and the US will be much more than they considered.

  3. Plantagenet on Wed, 15th Oct 2014 11:27 pm 

    Sellling a commodity at the market price is not an “oil war”. Next hysterical story please.

  4. GregT on Thu, 16th Oct 2014 12:21 am 

    It’s time for the DC globalists to stop meddling in world affairs and settle for a multipolar world, before western economies are completely crushed, and/or they ignite WW3.

    Their oil war is already backfiring big time.

  5. Makati1 on Thu, 16th Oct 2014 5:20 am 

    GregT, I don’t think the insane leadership in DC can stop their suicidal actions. They cannot admit that they were wrong or that they are the cause of most of the world’s problems. They are the perfect example of “Absolute power corrupts absolutely”. They even believe their own propaganda of exceptionalism/godhood.

    That is why I expect a nuclear war, and soon. Time is running out and they know it. They are up against immovable nuclear armed walls now (China & Russia) and all of their attempts to overthrow them from inside are failing. Instead, they are driving them together to their (US) horror.

    Exciting action story unfolding all around the world. Better than any war flick don’t you think?

  6. JuanP on Thu, 16th Oct 2014 8:48 am 

    Mak, I am with you there. If there was any hope for the people in power in DC, we would not be were we are. This war the US government has started in Ukraine is not just immoral, it is stupid, ignorant, and bat shit crazy. I pity Americans with nowhere else to go. The USA is destroying itself in an exponential way, and this destruction is about to go ballistic.
    For the sake of humanity’s wellbeing, I hope Russia wins this war. The US government needs to be stopped. I can’t wait for the crash to happen. I think I will be leaving the USA. I can no longer find peace here, there are too many delusional exceptionalists here and they are destroying their country with their ignorance and arrogance.

  7. louis wu on Thu, 16th Oct 2014 1:31 pm 

    This threatens the miraculous USA energy boom?Weren’t we the ones supposed to be flooding the world with huge, record breaking(I keep hearing this used and wonder what it is compared to) volumes of fracked oil & gas to drive down the price?What happened to Saudia America?

  8. Makati1 on Fri, 17th Oct 2014 3:19 am 

    JuanP, I always knew you were smarter than most on here. Your increasing consideration to relocate out of the new Gulag forming in North America proves it. Don’t wait too long.

    No-one who has not lived in a foreign country and in a different culture can possibly know what it is like. Too many Americans visit a country for two weeks vacation and think they know that country after only hitting the tourist spots and buying a few souvenirs.

    Likewise, anyone who has lived/fought in a foreign country many years ago, only has a past view of the country, probably biased by the reason they were there. I get a lot of “I served in…(twenty, thirty, forty years ago) …so I know what it is like there.” No you don’t.

    Anyway. Go for it! Any place will soon be better than North America, and any currency better than USDs. At least I think so.

  9. Davy on Fri, 17th Oct 2014 7:38 am 

    Juan is definitely smart enough to avoid moving to a country where 100MIL live in the space of the state of Arizona. That would be stupid. I hear most expats move there because they can live off a small nest egg that would not support them in a developed economy.

  10. Makati1 on Fri, 17th Oct 2014 9:05 am 

    Keep digging Davy, if it makes you feel better. I still prefer my current place of abode over the psychotic USSA. And what you ‘hear’ is not what is. Many here are way under retirement age, and love the country for what it is. A long way from the USSA.

    As for retirees, I just read that the US sends over 610,000 social security checks to foreign countries all over the world. And the number is probably more than twice that as I get mine thru a US bank, although the S.S. Dept. has my Philippine address and sends my notices here.

    And, yes, many do move to many foreign countries because their ‘nest egg’ goes farther. Sounds logical to me. The USSA gives their savings zero percent plus taxes. Here I get 3.5% in one account and 16% (yes, 16%) in another I share with my friend here. No taxes on the interest and safer than any US bank.

    So, why should I stay in the USSA? Patriotism? Hahahaha. Here I can be ‘patriotic’ and still live comfortably on half of my income. Watch the exodus from the States by corporations and educated people grow by exponential numbers soon.

  11. Davy on Fri, 17th Oct 2014 9:34 am 

    Mak, my fellow doomer friend that has embraced the dark side. No place is going to be pretty when the descent smacks us upside the head. I have no allusions of plenty in the Ozarks of Missouri especially at my age. You should not either. You are 70 in a country with little health care. Your adopted country is in overshoot plain and simple Mak. To disregard this reality is delusion and fantasy but hey, you like Sci-Fi. Wake up friend reality is close at hand.

  12. Makati1 on Fri, 17th Oct 2014 10:08 am 

    Davy, health care here is equal to any in the US and 1/3 to 1/4 the cost. My doc and dentist both had practices in the US for years and are better than the ones I had when I lived there. Don’t feel sorry for me. I’m planning on another few decades of watching the world self destruct from the comfort of my ‘always summer’ front porch. No winter, drought, or crazy neighbors with guns to worry about.

  13. Davy on Fri, 17th Oct 2014 10:33 am 

    Mak, I am not going to debate health care because you are wrong. End of life health car is not the same as maintenance. There is a clear difference between our two countries to deny that is ridiculous. Yet, your are often ridiculous. I feel sorry for both of us. If you are planning on a few more decades of life in a collapsing world then you are deceiving yourself with the facts being 70. One need only look to the 19th century to know the old age by our standards was a rarity. I have already accepted at cut of 15 years from my genetic life expectance of 90 per my grandparents. You need to wake up Mak first from your embrace of the dark side and second your delusions of a long life in the long emergency. There is no way to predict the future but there is something call excepting reality. This is something you fail to do in your covey in the Makati high rise.

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